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North Korea
North Korea: 'You are brainwashed
from the time you know how to talk'
UN dossier of regime's human rights abuses contains appalling
stories of how state brutally enforces 'racial purity'
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• North Korean crimes 'unparalleled' – UN report
Peter Walker
theguardian.com, Monday 17 February 2014 15.44 GMT
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North Korea · Asia Pacific
· United Nations
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Triplets sleep at a government-run home in Wonsan city, Kangwon province, North
Korea. Photograph: Gerald Bourke/AP
Among the desperate and appalling chronicle of horrors presented
across 372 pages in the full UN report into rights abuses in North Korea,
the chilling testimony of a young woman called Jee Heon, sent to a prison
camp after being returned from China, stands out.
Giving evidence to the commission's first public evidence session, in
Seoul last August, Jee explained the camp guards' policy towards women
who returned to North Korea pregnant. The country's strict rules over
perceived racial purity meant most of these women endured forced
abortions, lest their babies have Chinese fathers. One woman, however,
successfully gave birth, Jee said.
"The baby was crying as it was born; we were so curious, this was the
first time we saw a baby being born. So we were watching this baby and
we were so happy. But suddenly we heard the footsteps," she said. The
footsteps belonged to a guard, who ordered the mother to drown her
baby.
Jee continued: "The mother was begging, 'I was told that I would not be
able to have the baby, but I actually got lucky and got pregnant, so let
me keep the baby, please forgive me', but this agent kept beating this
woman, the mother who just gave birth. And the baby, since it was just
born, it was just crying. And the mother, with her shaking hands she
picked up the baby and she put the baby face down in the water. The
baby stopped crying and we saw this water bubble coming out of the
mouth of the baby. And there was an old lady who helped with the
labour, she picked up the baby from the bowl of water and left the room
quietly."
The evidence forms part of a particularly shocking section of the report
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on the experiences of North Koreans who escape to China and are sent
back, often with the assistance of Chinese authorities. The report
describes forced, late-term abortions without anaesthetic – sometimes
using rusty instruments, the use of chemicals to induce labour, beatings,
forced labour and poor nutrition.
split by war
The inquiry heard equally desperate personal testimony from Shin Donghyuk, perhaps the most famous escapee from North Korea – the only
prisoner ever known to have successfully escaped from a so-called 'total
control camp' for political prisoners.
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Shin – who was born in Camp 14 in 1981 through a union engineered by
guards between his unwilling parents – described his childhood there,
including how a girl aged about seven was beaten to death after she was
found to have slipped a few spilled grains from the guards' food rations
into a pocket. Mice were rife in the camp but could only be caught and
eaten on the rare occasions guards agreed, he said.
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Comment
Why it's a good time to
be a dictator like Kim
Jong-un
Jonathan Freedland:
First thoughts: Horrors
like those detailed in
the UN report into North
Korea aren't enough to
get the world to do
something. The
response is shock, but
then a collective shrug
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North Korean refugee and human rights activist Shin Dong-hyuk speaks during a
rally outside the White House in 2012. Photograph: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Shin also described what happened when he accidentally dropped a
sewing machine at the factory where he was forced to work. "The guard
told the floor manager to cut off my finger, so I got on my knees and I
begged not to do so but that didn't work obviously. And, I thought my
whole hand was going to cut off, but it was just a finger. So, at that time I
was grateful, really grateful to the guard because I was only losing a
finger instead of a hand," Shin said.
A number of the most disturbing stories in the report centre on North
Koreans' experiences during the great famines of the 1990s, a natural
disaster that the UN inquiry concludes was nonetheless exacerbated by
state policies to divert food to citizens considered more valuable.
At the hearing in Washington one woman, Jo Jin-hye, described carrying
around her severely malnourished infant brother, who could not be
breast-fed as their mother did not have enough food to lactate. "Because
there was no food, he was not able to stop crying," she told the panel.
"My baby brother died in my arms because he was not able to eat. And
because I was holding him so much, he thought I was his mom. So when I
was feeding him water, he was sometimes looking at me smiling at me."
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Another survivor of the famine, Kim Hyuk, became a street child – known
in North Korea as kotjebi, or 'flowering swallows'. He was seven when his
mother died and described being placed briefly in an orphanage, but
leaving after 24 out of the 75 children starved to death. A nurse told the
commission she saw many street children crushed to death after trying to
sleep in coal stores for warmth.
Around the same time, the commission heard, the North Korean state
spent almost £500m on monuments to the founder of the state, Kim Ilsung, when he died in 1994. The report also noted that even with
stunting among children rife, North Korea spent nearly £400m on luxury
goods for top officials in 2012 alone.
Perhaps the most illustrative personal testimonies in conveying the allpervasive reach of the state come in the section on propaganda and
official control over personal lives and thoughts. Among the evidence
was of children's lives at school, where they were encouraged to draw
only pictures of Kim Il-sung or images "which might have pleased Kim Ilsung".
One woman giving evidence anonymously to the hearing in Tokyo
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display through the heroic example of a young boy who died after
practising through the pain of an acute appendicitis and was viewed as a
hero.
The report describes the central role of the portraits of Kim Il-sung and
his late son and successor, Kim Jong-il, which must be displayed in every
North Korean home. One witness said his father had been sent to a
political prison camp after mopping up a spilled drink with a newspaper
containing an image of the elder Kim.
To control the flow of outside information, all TV sets are registered with
the state, which modifies them to ensure they receive only approved
channels. As another witness said of life in the nation: "You are
brainwashed, [you] don't know life outside. You are brainwashed from the
time you know how to talk, about four years of age, from nursery school,
brainwashing through education, this happens everywhere in life,
society, even at home."
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